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 LONDON  A British coroner has delivered a verdict of accidental death 
in the case of a stowaway who fell from a plane's undercarriage.The 
man's body landed in a street in southwest London in September. Months 
later he was identified as Jose Matada, 26, of Mozambique.At an inquest 
Thursday, police Det. Sgt. Jeremy Allsup said Matada was identified through 
a SIM card in his pocket. One number was traced to a 
woman whose family had employed him in South Africa.Matada may have been 
trying to reach Britain illegally.Pathologist Robert Chapman said Matada 
survived most of the flight from Angola, but might have been killed 
by hypothermia, lack of oxygen or the plane's landing gear before his 
body hit the ground.Coroner Sean Cummings ruled Matada's death an accident.
  would be better parents than gay men.Nancy 
Dreyer, a mother in a two-mom family, has noticed this in her 
own life."With gay male friends of ours who have kids, people will 
say, 'My gosh, who takes care of this baby?'    
as if they're not capable," says Dreyer, whose 57 and lives in 
suburban Boston.The assumption, she says, is that men aren't nurturing. 
And if they're too nurturing, she says, people get suspicious, noting that 
no one has ever questioned her and her partner about their ability 
to raise their son, who's now in college.She's noticed the different ways 
society treats gay men and lesbians, partly because she has a brother, 
Benjamin Dreyer, who's gay. The Dreyer siblings say it's difficult to compare 
their experiences because Benjamin came out in college, and Nancy in her 
early 30s.So he was the first to tell their parents. "They yelled 
at me. They took you to dinner," Benjamin Dreyer, who's 54 and 
works in publishing in New York City, now jokes with his sister.Truth 
was, as a young gay man coming of age as the AIDS 
epidemic took hold, his parents simply worried, and with good reason, his 
sister says.There's little doubt, they both say, that AIDS influenced the 
perception of gay men.Benjamin Dreyer says he dealt with societal bias by 
avoiding it, and surrounding himself with people he knew would be supportive, 
including his parents, eventually.But he's also realizing how quickly the 
need to do that is disappearing. He was s
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